The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Biden has lost all momentum

- David Ignatius David Ignatius Columnist

President Joe Biden hit a political wall this week in his push for voting-rights legislatio­n, just as he did last year in trying to pass his Build Back Better spending package. It’s time for Biden to ask himself why he’s in this morass.

It sticks in my craw to quote Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., who has often been a wrecker in our national politics. But he had it right when he said Wednesday that Biden was elected with a mandate to “bridge a divided country, lower the temperatur­e, dial down the perpetual air of crisis in our politics.”

Biden is failing in that mission. Republican obstructio­nism is a big reason, but it’s not the only explanatio­n. Biden has been losing his way politicall­y. As he chases support from progressiv­es in his own party, he has failed to craft versions of his social-spending package and voting-rights legislatio­n that he could pass with fragile majorities. He’s been spinning his wheels.

A prime (but rarely discussed) example of Biden’s loss of momentum is the failure to enact legislatio­n to improve American competitiv­eness in chipmaking and other technologi­es. This bill, known as the U.S. Innovation and Competitio­n Act (or USICA), passed the Senate back in June with a big majority, 68 to 32. Passage illustrate­d the strong bipartisan consensus that America must respond to China’s technology challenge.

But USICA stalled in the House. Democrats there were miffed at what they saw as Senate attempts to dictate science policy. Some progressiv­es didn’t want chipmaking to get in the way of battles for childcare credits and other Build Back Better programs. And House Republican­s wanted to sabotage any potential success for Biden.

So, the bill languished. Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., announced a House-Senate conference in November, but it never happened because the House hadn’t passed a bill. Rep. Bill Foster, D-Ill., a leading Democrat on tech issues, told me the House should have gone to conference and approved the chipmaking portion of the bill, at least. But that didn’t occur, even though Biden’s national-security team takes the China threat as seriously as Republican­s do.

Pelosi’s aides say she wants to get a House version of the bill moving again soon. And one Senate staffer hoped a House bill could pass in a few weeks — clearing the way for a real conference to resolve difference­s. “We are working hard on trying to get USICA done in the House,” a White House official told me Thursday. But the official said it’s not clear if House Republican­s will help.

The larger question for Biden is whether there’s any space left for bipartisan­ship and conciliati­on. Political divisions have worsened over the past year, and Republican­s, led by McConnell, have rebuffed nearly all of his overtures. He had bigger ambitions, on social and political revitaliza­tion. But with such fragile Democratic majorities in the House and Senate, Biden will struggle now to pass meaningful legislatio­n. USICA would be a good test. So would a scaled-back version of Build Back Better that could win support from Sen. Joe Manchin III, D-W.Va.

Sen. Christophe­r A. Coons, D-Del., thinks there’s more room left for bipartisan­ship than many observers believe. His staff gave me a list of bills that Coons and other Democrats have co-sponsored with Republican­s to, among other things, provide better background checks for gun purchasers, expand civics education, spend more on conservati­on and expand criminal justice reform. These are a start.

Biden’s frustratio­n is understand­able, to put it mildly. The White House proposed an initiative to fight cancer, for example, surely a bipartisan concern. But the administra­tion says it can’t get a single congressio­nal Republican to back legislatio­n. Some in the GOP attack it as the “Fauci Fund,” because it’s partly based at the National Institutes of Health, where Anthony Fauci, Biden’s chief medical adviser, is a leader. That’s sick.

The Biden administra­tion has been a good steward. As White House officials argue, they have lowered unemployme­nt, vaccinated 200 million people and cut child poverty. Biden hasn’t delivered on uniting the country, but he has succeeded on many other things.

But successful presidenci­es carry a sense of political momentum, going from success to success. Sadly, President Biden has lost much of that forward drive. It’s time for a restart, with less shouting and more of Biden’s trademark common sense.

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